Go Create Something
I want you to go create something. Now. Because when W. H. Auden wrote, in In Memory of W. B. Yeats:
Time that is intolerant
Of the brave and innocent,
And indifferent in a week
To a beautiful physique,Worships language and forgives
Everyone by whom it lives;
Pardons cowardice, conceit,
Lays its honors at their feet.Time that with this strange excuse
Pardoned Kipling and his views,
And will pardon Paul Claudel
Pardons him for writing well.
what he really should have been writing was that all creators’ — not just writers’ — flaws are pardoned over time (suggests Ralph Caplan in Pantheon for a Flawed Species).
So go make something. Create, design, enterprise. Consider creativity realized as your permission slip to be an ass-hat. Because in time, if you are productive enough, people will remember less your ass-hattery, and more your body of work (not to be confused with your banal-in-a-week beautiful physique).
Or at least, with so many embarrassing little videos in mind, history turning a blind eye to the flaws of the relentlessly creative is what I hope for.
Posted by Anittah Patrick on
August 13, 2009
tags: activity, creativity, production
No Comments
Open Source Budget Deficit Fixes
Two of my friends have recently posted ideas regarding how to fix various revenue shortfalls:
- Medical doctor wants to add pit stops to excess lawn action flanking California highways (his example is gas stations; I think electric car charging stations might be the way to go)
- Yale grad wants to outlaw filibusters and mandate that all legislative disagreements be resolved by steel cage matches broadcast on pay-per-view
Snip from the former:
We could generate a substantial amount of revenue, beautify local communities, decrease pedestrian exposure to pollutants, improve local traffic patterns, and increase efficiency of the freeway system by reducing overall transit times for drivers by reducing time spent waiting in congested and often complicated highway offramp business communities.
and the latter:
This could also go a long way in solving our budget deficit - can you imagine the pay-per-view revenues that would be created by a Korean Parliament style showdown over Universal Health care? People would be jumping off of the gallery, swinging from chandeliers - instead of filibusters there would be steel cage matches.
C-SPANdex, anyone?
Have you spotted any creative idears for fixin’ deficits?
Posted by Anittah Patrick on
July 28, 2009
This Weekend: Be Creative And Win!
I recently pressured FabricOnDemand.com’s founder, Rysa Ferdon Pitner, into answering five questions about her fabulous Ye Not-Olde Build-A-Fabric WorkShoppe. FabricOnDemand breaks it down like this:
- You pick a layout for a design to be printed onto a fabric
- You pick your fabric
- You upload your design
- You get your very own custom-made fabric
- You turn that into a head-turning piece of awesome
- Fame, fortune, etc.
Survey says (bolding mine):
1. Interwebz 2.0 is filled with websites teeming with animated whatzits, widgets-up-the-wazoo, and “poke” functionality. Not so at FabricOnDemand.com. What do you know that others don’t? Ancient Chinese secret?
I wouldn’t suggest we are on to some secret. We just made different decisions about where to invest our time. There are things we know, and things we think we know. With regard to our website – we know it’s there first and foremost to sell fabric. As we contemplate the current Web 2.0 reality, it’s easy to confuse website feature expansion with consumer utility. Just because something is possible does not mean it’s necessary. In our case, forgive the pun, we’ll stick to our knitting for the time being. We consider our product to be two-fold – 1) custom-printed fabric, and 2) Service in the production of custom printed fabric. We don’t need a lot of engineering overhead on our website to deliver those two products with excellence. One day we might; just not today.
2. Does this mean you won’t be adding any cool bells, whistles, or lasers to the website anytime soon?
If by bells and whistles you mean more fabric options to choose from and related services, yes – those are coming very soon. If you mean cool new technology frameworks that might make us worthy of a Webby award, those are not currently in our plans. We want to build a passionate and engaged audience because they love our product, and we don’t want to over-smart the experience just because the tools are available.
3. Launching a new business in these interesting times is a plucky move. Poking around your website suggests that your company is employee-owned and operated. Are there no plans for outside investors to help safeguard your new business risk? (I’m partly interested as I, too, have not sought outside investment.)
We do have investors; they’re on the inside – they are our employees. Clearly few companies have the wind at our back getting out of the gate in this market, but our employees’ investment each day in delivering unparalleled service and quality is the best foundation from which any company could launch. This is not to sound trite, but during the depression there was a mentality of toughness that helped pull this country through those difficult times. It feels as though much of that toughness and personal endurance has been lost today. We’ve gone back to basics with our business, and it feels good to be doing it yourself for a do-it-yourself audience. We feel really aligned with the customers we are connecting with. This feels like more of an opportunity and less like a risk to us. We have a team with a shared set of personal values, an elegant balance of complementary skills, and a common purpose. We believe those are the building blocks of an enduring success.
4. When I’m at a fabric store I need to fondle. (Recently, I bought some shiny blue leather, and I definitely did some sniffing to boot.) How does an Internet business solve for the element of “touch”?
Simple. We let our customers touch our fabrics. We freely ship our fabric swatches all over the world at our expense to invite customers into our personal store. There are several benefits to doing so including getting to know your prospects more intimately as well as putting an active reminder into the hands of your audience. When those fabric swatches show up, they provide the answer to the question “What does it feel like?”, and they create a connection between the customer and the product. For us it’s an investment – not a cost.
5. In ten years, will fabric stores be a distant memory?
Fabric stores will go the way of books. Though both products can be delivered digitally, a la the Kindle for books, there is a relationship and a fulfillment that comes with discovering new fabrics and designs in a store that cannot be substituted. Fabric stores are for exploring, learning, and inspiring – they create community. Just as book stores evolved into coffee shops as they recognized that intimate connection with the content, fabric stores will find their place in the future. The digital on-demand and custom-design model will serve to make the fabric store aisles infinite by complementing the on-the-floor inventory with on-demand inspiration.
Yes. What I like about Rysa, aside from her ability to teach me things like how to get stuff done, is that she gets it, is immensely creative, and makes stuff with her hands. Not only that, but her business is also in part an encouragement for all of us to make stuff with our hands.
Speaking of which, FabricOnDemand.com has conveniently given you something to do this holiday weekend — click here to submit your fabric design for their “Pimp These Old Chairs” reupholstery contest! Maybe it’s a clever slogan (”The Hot Seat”); maybe it’s a fantastic tessellation. Whatevs. If your keister wants to sit on it, yours might be the winning design.
Good stuff all around. Go forth and create, people.

Hardware!
Posted by Anittah Patrick on
July 2, 2009
tags: craft, creativity, fabric
1 Comment
A Different Kind Of Burning Sensation
Nietzsche once wrote, on writing, something to the effect of, “Writing for me is an embarrassing need. I do not know any other way.”
My friend Lilit, who makes my heart spilleth over in an ersatz big sister kind of way, writes in “brooklyn is burning” {emphasis mine}:
After this, the book won’t be so much mine anymore. It’s off to be edited and printed and illustrated. Of course the words will be mine, and the name on the cover will be mine. But I feel as if I’ve given birth to something that won’t be born until next April. Once the little bundle of mine is sent away, I’ll still get up and look at that empty screen every morning, and the words will come, because they always have, because they don’t know how not to, because I don’t know how to live without them burning out of my fingertips.
It makes me happy to know that good people who craft good things sign good book deals.
I am very proud of you, Ms. Marcus. I hope that those slender fingertips of yours keep on setting the world on fire.
